Read more at gawker.comChely Wright, the country singer who came out on Cinco de Gayo, says that since that day her album sales have dropped by half and she's received death threats. Guess the announcement wasn't the career boost some thought it was.
Send an email to Brian Moylan, the author of this post, at brian@gawker.com.
Chely Wright Says Her Music Career Was Damaged by Coming Out
Hubble telescope zeroes in on green blob in space
Hubble telescope zeroes in on green blob in space
By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein, Ap Science Writer
AP – This handout photo provided by NASA, taken April 12, 2010 by the Hubble Space Telescope, shows an unusual, …
WASHINGTON – The Hubble Space Telescope got its first peek at a mysterious giant green blob in outer space and found that it's strangely alive.
The bizarre glowing blob is giving birth to new stars, some only a couple million years old, in remote areas of the universe where stars don't normally form.
The blob of gas was first discovered by a Dutch school teacher in 2007 and is named Hanny's Voorwerp (HAN'-nee's-FOR'-vehrp). Voorwerp is Dutch for object.
NASA released the new Hubble photo Monday at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Seattle.
Parts of the green blob are collapsing and the resulting pressure from that is creating the stars. The stellar nurseries are outside of a normal galaxy, which is usually where stars live.
That makes these "very lonely newborn stars" that are "in the middle of nowhere," said Bill Keel, the University of Alabama astronomer who examined the blob.
The blob is the size of our own Milky Way galaxy and it is 650 million light years away. Each light year is about 6 trillion miles.
The blob is mostly hydrogen gas swirling from a close encounter of two galaxies and it glows because it is illuminated by a quasar in one of the galaxies. A quasar is a bright object full of energy powered by a black hole.
The blob was discovered by elementary school teacher Hanny van Arkel, who was 24 at the time, as part of a worldwide Galaxy Zoo project where everyday people can look at archived star photographs to catalog new objects.
Van Arkel said when she first saw the odd object in 2007 it appeared blue and smaller. The Hubble photo provides a clear picture and better explanation for what is happening around the blob.
"It actually looked like a blue smudge," van Arkel told The Associated Press. "Now it looks like dancing frog in the sky because it's green." She says she can even see what passes for arms and eyes.
Since van Arkel's discovery, astronomers have looked for similar gas blobs and found 18 of them. But all of them are about half the size of Hanny's Voorwerp, Keel said.
Online:
Hubble Space Telescope: http://www.spacetelescope.org/
Read more at news.yahoo.comGalaxy Zoo project: http://www.galaxyzoo.org
Galaxy-Sized Green Space Blob Is 'Strangely Alive'
Scientists finally took some pictures of "Hanny's Voorwerp," the "bizarre," galaxy-sized space blob discovered by a Dutch school teacher in 2007, and it turns out it's "giving birth" to "very lonely newborn stars." Better than "eating planets," I suppose.
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Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.
The Pope Hates Your Weird Name: Try Mary and Joseph!
Uh-oh! Are you named something weird, like "Trig" or "Bristol"? You might go to Hell! Or at least, get in trouble with the Pope. He told some people that Catholics should have Christian names, and Italians flipped out.
According to Reuters, the Italian press freaked at this:
The pope... said... that every new member of the faith acquires the character of a son or daughter of the Church "starting from a Christian name."
This, he said, was "an unequivocal sign that the Holy Spirit gives a rebirth to people in the womb of the Church."
"Give Your Children Christian Names," the papers read the next day, though, presumably in Italian ("Give-a You Children The Christian-a Names-a Spaghetti!"). They even provided lists of names! And since we aspire to be just as service-y as Italian editors, here's a list of names you should not give your children, if you want to go to Heaven:
- Chelsea
- Crystal
- Heather
- Mohammed
- Cruz
- Lady Gaga
- Apple
- Butthead
- Jewish
- Mars Bar
- :David-Wynn:
- Some weird symbol or something
- Jay-Z
- Ilovethedevil
- Thepopesucks
- Barack
[Reuters; image via Getty]
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Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.
Jacobs: Birds Dying Because of DADT Repeal
Jacobs: Birds Dying Because of DADT Repeal
See more at www.youtube.com
Bird Deaths Cause Identified by 'Respected Prophet'
"Scientists" say that recent mass bird deaths aren't out of the ordinary. "Respected prophet" Cindy Jacobs says repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell caused the bird deaths. Who do you believe? Before you answer, look at Cindy's outfit. [via]
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Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.
THIS GUY WAS TEXTING HIS GIRLFRIEND WHILE DRIVING
This is as real as it gets!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If you know anyone who likes to TEXT while driving, they should look close at this..
Pass it along.. MAYBE it will help.
VERY GRAPHIC
If you look at this, you'll never text or cell phone
While driving again!!!
This is the last few feet of a car that hit a semi head on!!
This guy was texting a friend when he crossed the center line!!!!
AND THIS ....
Stomach you might reconsider scrolling any
Further.
Every time you make a call or pick Up the phone while driving,
think about how this guy's day ended.
STAY OFF THE PHONE! HANG UP AND DRIVE, OR PULL OFF THE ROAD!!!!
Send this to everyone you care about. I did!!
First priest to join Congress recalled: Reunification of church and state on the down-low!!!
First priest to join Congress recalled
Catholic News Service
Jesuit Father Robert Drinan served from 1971 to 1981 as an elected representative in the U.S. Congress from Massachusetts. He "decided to answer the question of whether the public roles of the priest and politician are compatible by actually playing both roles," according to Bob Drinan: The Controversial Life of the First Catholic Priest Elected to Congress.Read more at www.catholicsentinel.org
This readable, biographical look at Father Drinan's life as a Jesuit priest, politician and law professor informs readers that he would answer "yes," a priest can serve successfully as an elected politician. But Pope John Paul II's answer was "no," and in April 1980, Father Drinan was instructed not to run for a sixth term in Congress.
The author of "Bob Drinan" is Jesuit Father Raymond Schroth, an associate editor at Jesuit-sponsored America magazine. "Whenever I have written a book, it has had to be about someone I admired," he acknowledges.
Yet, Father Schroth clearly did his homework in the form of research and interviews, and endeavors to present an honest picture of Father Drinan's intellectual and personal strengths, as well as weaknesses.
The author situates his story within a larger story of the formidable flow of issues both church and society contended with from the times surrounding Father Drinan's early Jesuit formation and his 1953 priestly ordination to the decade he served in Congress and the 26 years afterward. He died in January 2007.
Thus, the book affords readers an opportunity to revisit many of the dominant religious and social debates of recent decades — from the Watergate scandal to the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade abortion decision, from debates over nuclear weaponry to the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa and to Cardinal Joseph Bernardin's early proposals of a consistent life ethic.
Not surprisingly, Father Drinan's approach as a congressman to the abortion issue re-emerges for discussion again and again in this book.
A question mark punctuated Father Drinan's political career. In part the question was whether a priest could represent one political party and still dedicate himself to all people in the ways expected of priests.
But always managing to attract great attention, despite Father Drinan's passion to end the Vietnam War or the energy he invested in international human rights cases, was the distinction he drew as a legislator between abortion as a legal issue and a moral issue.
"The broader public evaluation of Drinan's career might fall into three groups," Father Schroth writes. There were his severe critics, his devoted followers and a third group of "admirers, who respected him as a champion of human rights but had serious reservations on his abortion position."
Among "those who strongly disliked him, most did so because of his abortion position," Father Schroth explains. However, for "his devoted supporters," Father Drinan's "lifelong commitment to human rights around the world is the unifying, idealistic glue of his public life."
Surely, Father Drinan viewed his apparently evolving abortion position differently than did his critics. He has spoken of the "horror" of abortion and insisted that "an unborn child must be respected as a precious gift from God."
But he long opposed making abortion a crime in America's pluralistic culture and even seems to have thought laws limiting abortion to certain hard cases had a left-handed way of legitimizing those abortions.
Whatever the case, many thought it appeared that Father Drinan supported abortion. And Father Schroth says that many admirers, who would follow Father Drinan "on the other justice issues and even accept the general principle that not all immoral activity can be controlled by law," remained "puzzled by what they consider(ed) his inconsistency on abortion."
After leaving Congress Father Drinan taught law at Georgetown University in Washington. But it seems that as he "was cleaning out his congressional office" and preparing to leave, he attended a White House dinner hosted by President Jimmy Carter. Father Schroth shares this fascinating little story about that evening:
"When he arrived at the White House, President Carter, who had been defeated for re-election the previous month by Ronald Reagan, took him aside and said, 'Father, God wants us both to do something different next year, and it will be more important.'"
Was Carter prophetic? I certainly felt it was the concluding section of "Bob Drinan" that brought him most to life as a person. At Georgetown, Father Drinan was to earn "the devotion of another generation of young men and women," Father Schroth writes.
He reports that "a Jesuit who knew Drinan fairly well" said that "while he could be 'snarky' as a congressman, he mellowed" in his new life, though the mellowing took some time.
Moreover, Father Schroth says, the opportunities "for kindness" Father Drinan encountered as a professor "gave him a way to express those profound paternal feelings that had long been a major emotional force in his life."